The mornings I remember most zestfully were those which took us up on to the chalk downs. To watch the day breaking from purple to dazzling gold while we trotted up a deep-rutted lane; to inhale the early freshness when we were on the sheep-cropped up- lands; to stare back at the low country with its cock-crowing farms and mist-coiled waterways; thus to be riding out with a sense of spacious discovery— was it not something stolen from the lie-a-bed world and the luckless city workers—even though it ended in nothing more than the killing of a leash of fox- cubs (for whom, to tell the truth, I felt an uncon- fessed sympathy)? Up on the downs in fine September weather sixteen years ago.. .. It is possible that even then, if I was on a well- behaved horse, I could half forget why we were there, so pleasant was it to be alive and gazing around me. But I would be dragged out of my day dream by Denis when he shouted to me to wake up and get round to the far side of the covert; for on such hill days we often went straight to one of the big gorses without any formality of a meet. There were beech woods, too, in the folds of the downs, and lovely they looked in the mellow sunshine, with summer's foliage falling in ever-deepening drifts among their gnarled and mossy roots. "What you want is a good, hard, short-legged horse well up to your weight and able to get through the mud and do a long day," remarked Denis one after- noon in October. We had been out from seven till four, with a good long spell of digging to finish up with. Having said 239